Copywriter: Cabel.

July 21st, 2011

Ladies and gentlemen, are you comfortably running Mac OS X Lion?

Because this is our moment.

Years of technological progression, a steady flowing river of genius and fortitude, breakthrough and discovery, have sent us ever-forward, hurtling towards this. From the humble beginnings of the first wire-wrapped computer, to the rolled-up-sleeves of the hard-working women and men of The Unicode Consortium, to the dedicated Apple engineer staying late in the office to ship a major operating system update while his family sits without him at the dinner table. “Will I see Daddy tomorrow?”, his son asks, picking at his plate. “I don’t know”, is the sad, quiet reply. You see, today is built on the hard working backs of those from yesterday. And on the shoulders of those backs, we will stand tall, reaching towards tomorrow.

The release of Mac OS X Lion added an important new feature: system-wide pictograms, or, as you might call them, “Emoji”. And for the first time, these pictograms are not based on a mobile-carrier ever-shifting method of encoding via the “private” Unicode character space, but are using the officially accepted Unicode 6.0 Emoji / ISO 10646 standard.

Now that you’ve had a moment to recover, I’d like to give particular thanks to the country of Laos, who run the last remaining domain registrar I’m aware of that still allows international domain names that use any Unicode character. Our sincere thanks must be given to Thongsing Thammavong, the Prime Minister of Laos, for his valuable assistance in making all of this possible.

Update: I’ve just got word that, due to intense political unrest in Laos (untrue), they no longer allow Emoji domains! Yes, .la is no more. Fortunately, the territory of Tokelau (!) has stepped in to meet this intense international need! Emoji .tk domains are now available.

(Why are they so hard to register? Due to fears of IDN homograph attacks, most registrars, like .com, now only allow specific language sets to be used for Unicode domain names. The days of registering ☃.net — a previous Cabel effort in this series — are long gone. In fact, back in 2007 ICANN expressly recommended that “symbols and icons […] such as typographic and pictographic dingbats” should not be allowable code points for domain names. Fortunately, Laos didn’t get the memo.)

Now some of you might be asking, “What’s the point? How is this useful? It requires Lion, it only works in Safari, let alone on Windows. They’re impossible to type. How is this at all useful?” I understand, but you’re not really asking the right questions.

Now, I’m sure those of you who are members of the press will be eager to leave and phone your bureau as soon as possible with this discovery. Thus, I’ll bring my presentation to an end.

My friends, I’m glad you could join me on this trip into the unknown, now made known.

The internet will never be the same.

Oh, and one more thing: if you ever want to tell your friends about Transmit or Coda, just have them visit:

Will

Jay

To address the deleted comment complaining about Firefox/Windows support for certain Unicode characters, that’s primarily a failing of the fonts included with Windows, which don’t support these Unicode characters. There may be fonts in Windows 7 that do support these characters, but I’m guessing the Panic guys didn’t have a Windows machine on which to find one for stylesheet purposes. (Although I mostly suspect that no Windows 7 font supports these characters anyway, and that nothing could be done about that. Once again the Mac guys are having more fun.)

To foobar, re: “Chrome 12 on Ubuntu,” this blog uses the `text-rendering: optimizeLegibility` CSS attribute, which I’ve found can be really wonky on some browsers — and in those that support it, I haven’t noticed much benefit.

Yaniv Eidelstein

Blake Embrey

Wow, this is an awesome concept. But there are still to new of sites out there that don’t even support UTF8. Anyway, I think this should be available for all domain extensions, it’s our choice to register them. I just have to find one now that perfectly represents me/my name in one swift emoji ;)

Chuck

Tom

Hemendra Kumar Saini

That’s really interesting thought that first emoji domain is not a .com and its .la, as you said that they stopped seliing the emoji domain stuff. It is really crazy and .tk domain start cashing on this oppurtunity.

jhembach

jhembach

(tried posting a comment containing en emoji character, but the system cut it off…)

I thought I’d give this a go for the hell of it and registered (elephant).tk through iwantmyname, but I can’t seem to use it for anything but the built-in web forwarding feature. My host (1and1) doesn’t support the emoji domain, not does blogger, nor any of the handful of other services I’ve tried linking it to.

Does anyone know which – if any – 3rd party providers support linking an external emoji domain?

Blake

Brian Larson

Shawn

Just wondering, but it doesn’t look like the links are working on this page to show the emoji. I know that “.la” isn’t working, but I’m on Lion. Shouldn’t the link to it on this page show the emoji? Thanks…

Bob Jonson

Onita

Hello, Neat post. There’s a problem along with your site in web explorer, could check this? IE nonetheless is the marketplace leader and a huge component to other people will pass over your great writing due to this problem.